Valdiron de Oliveira sat out the 15/15 Bucking
Battle Saturday after aggravating a shoulder injury, so that he
could try for a second event win the following day. Silvano
Alves has had a conservative approach to the entire
season. Both men have their sights set on the gold buckle.

Oliveira opted not get on Smackdown Saturday, and
then used the first pick in the bull draft Sunday afternoon to
choose Jack Daniel's After Party. He bucked off,
and finished third in the event.

Valdiron de Oliveira managed to preserve his lead atop the
world standings heading into the summer break.

Alves rode two of four at the Pueblo Invitational, and was the
only rider to cover his bull in the 15/15 Bucking Battle. However,
the four re-rides he has declined in previous events came back to
haunt him, as the unassuming L.J. Jenkins moved
past him from third to second in the world standings with a
second-place finish Sunday.

Jenkins has quietly put together eight consecutive Top 10 finishes
- seven of which have been in the Top 5.

Alves has ridden two more bulls (41) than any other rider so far.
He won last year's title by covering 11 more than anyone else, but
with two-thirds of the season completed, the reigning World
Champion is not getting the same kind of statistical separation he
did a year ago.

Still, he didn't make his move to the No. 1 position in 2011 until
after the two-month summer break.

In fact, a year ago, he trailed Oliveira at the break by 702
points, and had already amassed three event wins. This year he not
only has fewer event wins (2) and three fewer Top 5 finishes (5),
but he also trails Oliveira by 788.25 points. He now must also
contend with passing Jenkins, who is 156.25 points ahead of
him.

L.J. Jenkins covered all four bulls in Pueblo and slipped
into second overall.

Guilherme Marchi, who dominated the competition
in 2008 to win a world title after finishing second three years in
a row, was disappointed that for the second consecutive event he
was unable to finish because of injuries.

Injuries have also affected J.B. Mauney's
position in the world standings.

He broke a bone in his left (riding) hand when it was stepped on
in Kansas City, Mo. He missed one event before returning to
competition, trying to ride with his right hand.

The three bulls he then was able to cover with his opposite hand
have turned out to be the difference between being ranked fifth and
ninth in the world standings.

While the 2012 World Champion is likely to come from someone
already ranked in the Top 5, the next five riders in the world
standings - Marco Eguche, Renato Nunes, Austin Meier,
Fabiano Vieira and Luke Snyder - are all
formidable contenders in their own right.

Beginning Aug. 10 and 11, in Tulsa, Okla., there will be 10 events
separating them from the end of the season.

NEWS & NOTES

WHEN A PLAN COMES TOGETHER:Renato
Nunes was happy to see Funeral Wagon
Saturday night. In fact, he was so excited with his Round 3 draft
pick that he brazenly told his fellow Brazilians, "This event, I
win."

Nunes was certain he would cover his draft pick and have a chance
to select Bucking Machine in the Built Ford Tough Championship
Round. The plan came together as expected.

He covered Funeral Wagon for 87.25 points, and with the second
pick in the championship round he selected Bucking
Machine, whom he covered for 90 points to claim his first
BFTS win of the season.

Renato Nunes wins the Pueblo Invitational with a 90-point
effort on Bucking Machine in the championship round.

"I feel great, because I started really good this year and then
I came down a little bit (in the world standings)," he said. "I try
hard and I work out every day, but when it's not going to happen,
it's not going to happen."

He smiled and added, "Nobody can beat me on those two
bulls."

This weekend's event win - the ninth of his career - moved him to
seventh in the world standings.

Nunes is especially happy about the payday.

He won $38,853 to bring his season total up to $91,953. He knew
well that all his friends had already surpassed $100,000 for the
season.

He'll head home to Brazil to see his family before going up to
Canada in July, trying to double his current earnings by winning
the Calgary Stampede.

In the meantime, he said, "I get to take some money home, and
there's nothing better than that."

A BEFORE B: After three unsuccessful attempts on
Bushwacker, Luke Snyder tried his hand at covering
Asteroid in the 15/15 Bucking Battle. "I had a
game plan and it just went to heck in a hurry," he said. "I knew he
was going to kick the lights out like that. Man, his back, he's
just so steep that he just pushes you in the back and you feel it
hit you."

Asteroid exploded out of the chute and in a swift left turn sent
Snyder over his right shoulder in 1.9 seconds. Snyder was surprised
to learn the judges only marked him 44.75 points.

Luke Snyder bucks off Asteroid in the 15/15 Bucking Battle in
Pueblo, Colo.

"He's the real deal," said Snyder, who added that Asteroid's
head disappeared as if he had tucked it between his two front
legs.

"I've been on both of them. I've been on Bushwacker three times
and Bushwacker dang sure bucks, but there's more power to that
little brindle. He's more difficult to ride. They're both the total
package, but from my perspective, Asteroid is a lot
stronger."

INJURY REPORT: Dr. Tandy Freeman and the entire
sports medicine team were busy throughout the three-day event in
Pueblo. Freeman released the following injury updates:

Robson Palermo sustained a nasal fracture when he
was hit in the face by his bull in the 15/15 Bucking Battle on
Saturday night. He will also be examined in Dallas for a possible
broken jaw. He was originally listed as questionable for Sunday,
but wound up competing in Round 3. Palermo experienced dizziness
near the end of his third-round ride, and as a precaution he did
not compete in the championship round "due to multiple
complaints."

Robson Palermo takes a hard hit to the face in bucking off
Perfect Poison in the 15/15 Bucking Battle in Pueblo,
Colo.

Guilherme Marchi did not compete in the
championship round because of a sprained right (riding) hand.

Fabiano Vieira aggravated a chronic
right-shoulder sprain when he was thrown to the ground during the
final round, while Marco Eguche did not finish the
event with a sprained right (riding) hand.

Ryan Dirteater sustained a concussion for the
second time in three weeks when he was pulled down on his bull's
horns during the 15/15 round. He did not take a re-ride bull and
did not compete on Sunday.

Ryan Dirteater sustains a concussion in bucking off Train
Wreck in the 15/15 Bucking Battle in Pueblo, Colo.

Ty Pozzobon missed the 15/15 round due to an
aggravation of an old knee sprain after being thrown by his
second-round bull. Pozzobon was thrown three times and jumped over
the fence into the audience to escape. He did not compete on
Sunday.

Brendon Clark sustained a concussion when he was
thrown to the ground by his first-round bull. He finished the
event, but sprained his jaw (right temporomandibular joint) when he
collided with the bull's head during the third round.

Jared Farley sustained a concussion when he was
thrown to the ground by his third-round bull.

Markus Mariluch sustained a bruised right
shoulder (riding arm) and possible rib fracture when he was thrown
into the chute by his first-round bull. He was listed as
questionable for Saturday, but rode and then did not compete in
Round 3 due to the rib injury.

Jarrod Craig sustained a concussion and a facial
laceration during the championship round when he was pulled down on
his bull's head.

Jarrod Craig takes a nasty shot to the head from Red Hot in
the championship round at the 2012 PBR BFTS Pueblo Invitational in
Pueblo, Colo.

FALLOUT: The weekend's multiple injuries had an
effect on how the Built Ford Tough Championship Round played
out.

With Palermo and Marchi unable
to compete in the final round, Cody Nance and
Stormy Wing had one last chance to salvage their
weekends.

Nance had won the opening round with a 90.5-point ride, but
replays clearly showed he had both spurs lodged in his bull rope
when he left the chute. "Catching knots" is illegal, and results in
a disqualification if noticed by the judges. The judges did not
make the call on Friday.

Cody Nances puts up a round-best score of 90.5 points on Hee
Bee Gee Bee to win the opening round of the 2012 PBR Pueblo
Invitational in Pueblo, Colo.

Nance bucked off in the next two rounds, and would have missed the
championship round by one spot, while Wing was 12th in the
average.

Wing made a solid ride in Round 2, but after bucking off in Round
3, he left the arena and headed home to Dalhart, Texas.

Last week in Nampa, Idaho, Stewart benefited when Austin
Meier, Sevi Torturo and Nance turned down re-ride options.
He took his, and finished second in the round on Another
One. Sunday afternoon in Pueblo, he was left with
Josey Wales.

Harve Stewart puts up 89.50 points in the championship round
at the 2012 PBR BFTS Pueblo Invitational in Pueblo, Colo.

Stewart covered for 89.5 points, and finished second in the
round and fifth in the event, and moved up to 13th in the world
standings, the highest he's ever been ranked this late in a
season.

"I just kept my mind in the middle and got a score," he
said.

YOUNGSTERS: The much-anticipated inaugural Back
Seat Buckers event took place Saturday morning in Pueblo. It was
the first of four regular-season events before the 100 two-year-old
bulls make their way to Las Vegas for the Finals.

The top-scoring bull was Booger Red Skoal, whose
owner George Goins was ecstatic to watch him earn
90.5 points in his first outing. He beat out CB 603 in a
competition that saw 11 of the bulls earn 86 points or more.
Thirty-five of the bulls scored 80 or more points.

Goins earned $7,000 for the win on a day in which the ABBI paid
out $25,000 in prize money.

Booger Red Skoal is now the frontrunner to win the top prize of
$250,000 in Las Vegas, where more than $400,000 will be paid out,
bringing the season total to $500,000.

Bear Pascoe, a tight end for the reigning Super
Bowl Champion New York Giants, had the top-scoring bull of several
celebrity owners. Pascoe's bull The G Man was
marked 85.5 points to split 12th in the round with four other
bulls.

The program allows for fans to purchase the rights to owning their
own bucking bulls without having the concern of raising, training
and hauling the bovine athletes to ABBI events.

Three Stock Contractor of Year winners - Tom Teague, Jeff
Robinson and Chad Berger - are also
involved in the inaugural season of Back Seat Buckers, as is former
PBR CEO Randy Bernard.

The next Back Seat Buckers event will take place Aug. 10 and 11 in
Tulsa, Okla.

Anyone interested in purchasing the rights to one of 100 Back Seat
Buckers bulls for next season can contact Ross
Coleman via email at rosscoleman3879@aol.com.

TESTED A CLASSIC: For the second consecutive
time, Shepherd Hills Tested was the top-scoring
ABBI Classic bull. He was marked 90 points in his third Classic win
of the 2012 season.

His highest mark from the six judges was 23 points, with a low of
21.75 and an average of 22.5 points from the remaining four judges.
Classic bulls are scored by six judges, with the high and low
scores discarded.

The D&H Cattle bull beat out the competition by a full three
points.

Five other 2- and 3-year-old bulls - Page U36, Midnight
Mood, Super Cool Cat, Change Up and
Wilson -scored 87 points to split second, third,
fourth, fifth and sixth in the average. Gonzo
(86.75), Ragin JT (86.5),
Altercation (86.25) and Contra
Band (86.25) rounded out the rest of the Top 10 Classic
bulls competing in Round 2 of the Pueblo Invitational.

First place paid out $9,979.50. The Top 8 bulls earned a total
payout of $33,265.

MEANWHILE, IN ROUND 1: The opening round of the
Pueblo Invitational featured an ABBI Maturity competition. A
Maturity works the same way as a Classic competition, but while
Classic competitions feature 2- and 3-year-olds, a Maturity is open
to bulls of all ages.

Poker Face and Cat Ballou split
the Maturity win.

Both bulls were marked 89.5 points and each took home a check for
$7,137. Box K Cattle hauls Poker Face, who bucked off
Emilio Resende, and Diamond S Bucking Bulls hauls
Cat Ballou, who bucked off Meier.

LOSTROH MENDING: Home-state favorite Kody
Lostroh was in Pueblo on Friday night. The 2009 World
Champion was in town to sign autographs at sponsor-related
activities surrounding Wild Wild West Festival, which was held in
conjunction with the BFTS event.

Kody Lostroh is dealing with a separating pelvis.

Lostroh is out of competition because of an injury to his
pelvis.

The left and right side of a pelvis typically are held together
tightly by several tendons. According to Lostroh, his tendons have
been stretched out, and therefore the two sides of the pelvis are
splitting apart.

He's been told the injury will heal on its own without surgery.
He's wearing a special hip brace virtually 24 hours a day.

He is expected to return to the BFTS after the summer break in
Tulsa, Okla. He'll even be competing at one event in Canada next
week.

SYMPATHIES: The PBR extends its condolences to
the family of Stan Dandy, who passed away on May
12. Dandy and his wife Frances Dandy own the Table
Mountain Casino outside of Fresno, Calif., and have sponsored
several BFTS and Touring Pro events in California.

Through the years, the Dandy family has been known to add its own
money the payout awarded to the winning riders. In 2011, they added
$10,000 to the total paid to Valdiron de Oliveira
for winning the BFTS event in Fresno.

Private funeral services for Mr. Dandy took place last
Friday.

DAD'S DONATION: The PBR and DAD'S Pet Foods
announced that they are donating 1,000 pounds of dog food to the
PAWS for Life Animal Welfare & Protection Society, a
non-profit, private organization in Pueblo which found homes for
more than 400 dogs in 2011.

The Official Pet Food of the PBR, DAD'S Pet Foods looks to donate
1,000 pounds of pet food product to a local humane society, animal
rescue, or animal care center in each city the BFTS visits.

PAWS for Life Animal Welfare & Protection Society is a no-kill
shelter, funded entirely by donations and grants and supported by
volunteers. The PAWS for Life shelter is a safe haven for strays,
owner surrenders, and even dogs from nearby shelters who need a
little extra help finding their forever home. The PAWS for Life
shelter houses 50-60 dogs at any one time, keeping every resident
until it is adopted or becomes too ill to treat.

RIDE WITH ROSCOE: The recently retired
Coleman announced that the first-ever Ross Coleman
PBR Bull Riding School will take place June 2 and 3 in Henrietta,
Texas, at the Brad Fudge Arena. Students will receive one-on-one
instruction. Coleman will also be joined by Pistol
Robinson.

There will be bulls for all skill levels, and rides will be filmed
for playback. The event will coincide with the SAYiWON'T
Rope-N-Ride. The cost is $400 per student. For more information,
call 940-224-1244.

OR LEARN FROM CHRIS AND J.B.: The PBR will be
hosting a bull riding school in Asheville, N.C., on June 1, 2 and 3
in conjunction with the TPD event there. Two-time World Champion
Chris Shivers and J.B. Mauney
will serve as instructors.

The cost is $400 per student. Students will also receive two
tickets and passes to the TPD event that takes place June 1 and 2.
To register, contact Edwin Lay at 719-242-2800
ext. 3324.